I've been involved in discussions about ways to reduce greenhouse gas emissions for 11 years now. I focus on the transport sector - one of the hardest for governments to get a handle on because the people controlling how much gets emitted are not big corporations. They are the billions of individuals - 6.6 of them or so according to the US Census World POPClock - whose travel choices collectively determine the impact of the sector on the global environment.
Proposed strategies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from the sector focus almost entirely on technological advances in vehicles, fuels, and batteries - particularly in the US. This is true despite the fact that existing vehicle technologies coupled with regular old gasoline could dramatically reduce these emissions in the US because so many of the vehicles on our roads guzzle fuel and belch out tons (literally) of carbon. One thing that would dramatically change our carbon emissions levels in the US is for people to make different choices when they buy cars (and that includes choosing to buy cars rather than trucks or UAVs - Urban Assault Vehicles). Many other behavior-based strategies exist as well, but listing them isn't the point of this post, so I won't.
To the extent that policy wonks and academics do talk about behavior and transport carbon emissions, they tend to focus on financial incentives such as taxes. Which they quickly dismiss as politically unrealistic, and we're back to the technology strategies. But I think that many people, given the right information and options, will make climate-friendly choices on their own. I'm not a psychologist, but it seems to me that this is basic human nature.
An interesting story from a couple of development economists illustrates this point. Esther Duflo, a preeminent young economist from MIT, and Rema Hanna of NYU were recently studying education in a remote region of India. Because of its remoteness, primary schools in this region are of the one-room-schoolhouse variety. One of the prerequisites for learning in a school setting is that both the teacher and the students need to be at school at the same time. This was a problem in this region, since in a one-room-schoolhouse there is no teacher oversight and both teachers and students often have responsibilities that compete with showing up at school. So even though both teachers and students would turn up at the schoolhouse on most days, there was no way to coordinate their attendance and it ended up that the average number of days of instruction - and therefore learning - for students was severely impacted.
Duflo and Hanna, along with a local organization, did an experiment in which they introduced an oversight scheme for teacher attendance (using cameras with time and date stamps), and paid them by the day that they showed up at school. Under the old scheme, teacher pay was not linked to attendance - teachers received a set monthly salary whether they actually showed up at school or not. To give the teachers a cushion in case of illness, under the new pay-by-the-day scheme the teachers were paid for 10 days of attendance even if they did not show up at all for the month.
Under the set monthly salary scheme, teachers actually showed up about 60 percent of the time. Under the pay-by-the-day scheme, teachers showed up about 80 percent of the time. Good. But there was one perverse outcome (and it is not in Duflo and Hanna's working paper on the topic, but Duflo explained this outcome at a seminar I attended last fall). Under the pay-by-the-day scheme, 10 percent of teacher-months were complete no-shows. These teachers were presumably in a situation where they were ill or had other responsibilities for enough of the month that showing up at school was no longer going to increase their earnings, so they didn't teach. They were acting as economic theory predicts - in their own rational, financial self-interest.
Here comes the interesting part. Under the old scheme, there were no recorded teacher-months of complete absence. None. I do not think these teachers came to school because they were afraid of losing their jobs if they were absent too much of the time. I think they came to school in spite of the lack of oversight because they valued education and wanted to contribute to their communities by teaching.
This says to me that people will at least make an effort to do the right thing when entrusted to do it on their own. It is simple human nature. But when they are coerced into doing what someone else has decided is the right thing (through some financial incentive program such as the Indian teachers faced - or a carbon tax!), then they no longer take personal responsibility. I'm certainly not against a carbon tax, but I do think Duflo and Hanna's experiment has a message for policymakers. Or perhaps a double message. Part I: Even if you can't get a financial incentive to become law, people just might do what is in the global interest if they simply know what to do and are clear on why they are doing it. Part II: If you can create a financial incentive, it is vitally important to set that incentive at the right level because people will assume that complying with the law is equal to doing their part (and they are unlikely to do anything extra).
So why aren't there more people asking for serious public education and marketing campaigns on this issue? What I'm suggesting would be on the same scale as car and truck ads - virtually ubiquitous, that is. The Ad Council is great and all, but can't we (and shouldn't we) do more?
Monday, May 21, 2007
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7 comments:
One interesting development along these line is that the private sector is taking advantage of the desire for people to do good by the earth. I recently read the "GREEN" issue of an outdoors magazine on the plane. It was a giant advertisement for companies with green products. They kept trumpeting that since the government wasn't doing anything right-minded consumers and companies were leading the charge.
This was a little disturbing to me for two reasons. One, public education by companies is unabashedly biased for the corporation doing the education. And more importantly, it promotes a purchasing things as an answer when the best solution is likely not buying things.
I think that our technology has evolved so far beyond our social arrangements and institutions that it will take some time for us to "find our place in this universe" once again, if that is even possible. Getting 'the incentives' right is certainly a good start, but what motivates our actions nowadays? The new field of 'behavioural economics' is making advances in understanding our motivations which may have future policy implications. But as Daniel Gilbert pointed out in his 'Stumbling on Happiness', humans may have a well developed sense of visual depth perception, but that sense does not translate into a well developed perception of time. It is very hard for us to associate our current actions with an unknown future. Human beings are unique in that we not only plan for the future, but we project what that future will be like and we plan accordingly. We do seem to have some sense of altruism, but this tendency is rapidly discarded on the alter of mass-consumerism.
"If you can create a financial incentive, it is vitally important to set that incentive at the right level because people will assume that complying with the law is equal to doing their part (and they are unlikely to do anything extra)."
This statement especially resonated with me. Given the kinds of figures I've seen that represent our best guess as to the "full cost of driving", my reaction has been "well, shoot, that's not too bad -- we can afford that". My bet is that if we priced driving at those levels, most people would pay it, assume they've "done their part", and not change their behavior one iota. (Full disclosure: I am probably such a person).
Patricia,
This is exactly Gilbert's point: we think that we know how we would react to various incentives, but when we are actually confronted with the situation we might do something completely different. When we consider a particular situation we tend to look at it in isolation from everything else (ie how much will it cost me to drive), but if the cost of oil/fuel goes up, this will an impact on everything!
It is also important to keep in mind short-term versus long-term changes. Sure in the short term people will complain about the price of fuel, but not many people are very likely to go out and buy a new car just because of that. On the other hand, if fuel prices remain high (like they have been in Europe for decades), people will factor that in when they consider what vehicle to buy the next time around.
The best kind of incentives are those which create a 'virtuous cycle': I will willingly pay more for something because I know that you will too, and all of us will benefit from it!
Zvi and Patricia,
From my own experience, I know that "paying the price" lets me do what I want without further angst. OTOH, I also consider the price when making the decision -- when the price seems awfully high, I remember that it is because of included tax on bad behavior. If I decide to not make the purchase (or purchase less), I can then feel good about doing the right thing. It's in that sense that taxes can impact us morally and not just financially.
For those people who don't care about their pollution, tax them so they pollute less. For those who do care, educate. Use both.
Deborah -- very nice insight from DuFlo. I hadn't heard that one...
Finally -- my own opinion (as a development econ) is that broad-based taxes are far more useful than narrow or targeted taxes. In the developing world, it's hard to tax someone's (unobservable) income but easy to tax their (observable) property. A carbon tax is a lot easier to tax than someone's tailpipe emissions.
ps/I have also written on educating drivers here: http://tinyurl.com/39b3nh
Yes, I agree. Use both.
Educate through awareness and experience.
Awareness: Anyone in this conversation have any advertising connections? I do wonder why I'm not seeing any television or internet commercials for environmental friendly modes of transport (even one car compared to another)? Brief commercials on all sorts of media outlets would be an incredible way to educate a wide array of individuals. If folks found out that car A was better for the
environment than car B, for example (especially if it has better fuel efficiency), then that would certainly be a good selling point, even for many individuals who wouldn't think to ask about that comparison in the first place (myself included, though my wife would think to ask).
Experience: Well, if gas/oil prices and/or taxes reached a certain threshold, those folks with their UAV's would be hit pretty hard financially. On their next go around, they may look for something less costly (which incidentally could be more environmentally friendly). This would be an even more powerful motivator than the above. However, the problem is finding out what that threshold actually is and getting folks in 'power' to agree to reach it.
I read a study a couple years ago conducted in a daycare in Israel. The daycare was trying to reduce late pickups, and the researchers wanted to investigate parents' value of time. The daycare hadn't used to charge for late pick-ups, but they started charging really high prices (something like 10 times as much as an hour cost, and charged per minute of lateness). They found that both the number of late pickups and how late parents were actually _increased_. The researchers concluded (and I can't remember if they were just hypothesizing or if the parents were interviewed), that guilt at wasting the staff's time was a better motivator for getting parents to pick kids up on time. With the price in place, parents assumed that the daycare was being fully compensated for their tardiness, and that they then had a right to be late.
In terms of how this translates to carbon, isn't this phenomenon at the heart of the criticism against carbon offsets, too? Detractors argue that they will just empower people to continue their carbon-intensive lifestyles guilt-free. That seems to be another case where you have absolutely got to get the calculation (and verification) right for it to work.
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